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Volume 69, Issue 1, Pages 9-15 (July 2010)


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Factors associated with prospective development of environmental annoyance

Frida EekaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Björn Karlsona, Kai Österberga, Per-Olof Östergrenb

Received 14 July 2009; received in revised form 24 November 2009; accepted 1 December 2009. published online 22 January 2010.

Abstract 

Objectives

Idiopathic environmental intolerance (IEI) has in cross-sectional studies been associated with emotional problems and psychiatric disorders. However, in the absence of prospective studies it has not been possible to determine whether emotional problems precede the onset of IEI, or are a consequence of IEI. The purpose of this study was to address this issue in a prospective panel study design.

Methods

The study sample (n=10 275) responded to a postal survey that included five questions regarding annoyance from environmental factors, at baseline and at follow-up five years later. Associations between a number of self-rating scales of stress, subjective health, and working conditions at baseline on one hand, and development of environmental annoyance from baseline to follow-up on the other, were examined.

Results

Participants having developed environmental annoyance between baseline and follow-up had at baseline reported more subjective health complaints, higher levels of stress, strain, and lack of recovery, more dissatisfaction with their work situation, and lower personal social support, compared to participants not developing environmental annoyance.

Conclusion

Elevated subjective health complaints, high stress in daily life and a strained work situation, all possible signs of sustained arousal, increase the risk of developing annoyance to environmental factors. The results fit the hypothesis that reduced subjective health, over the course of time, may be attributed to environmental factors.

a Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Lund University, Lund, Sweden

b Division of Social Medicine and Global Health, Department of Clinical Sciences, Malmö, Lund Universitiy, Lund, Sweden

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Barngatan 2, Lund University Hospital, 221 85 Lund, Sweden. Tel.: +46 46 177437; fax: +46 46 177285.

PII: S0022-3999(09)00506-6

doi:10.1016/j.jpsychores.2009.12.001


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